Edward Frank Hummert, Jr. (June 2, 1884[1] – March 12, 1966), professionally known as Frank Hummert and sometimes credited as E. Frank Hummert, was an American advertising agent originally but was best known for producing episodes of nearly 100 daytime/primetime radio dramas, soap opera serials, and music programs between the 1930s and the 1950s.
By 1937, with his success on radio and potential advertisers lining up to become clients, Hummert had become advertising's highest paid executive.[5]
Early life
Edward Frank Hummert, Jr. was born to parents Edward F. and Carrie Hummert[6] in St. Louis, Missouri on June 2 in the disputed year of 1884.[1][7] According to a majority of sources and public records including the Draft Registration Card he completed and signed in September 1918, Edward Frank Hummer was born on June 2, 1884. However, this date has been disputed by some sources including media historians. For example, the Encyclopædia Britannica lists Hummert's birth year as 1879,[3] while media historian Christopher H. Sterling lists Hummert's birth year as 1885.[8] Even radio historian Jim Cox lists two different birth years in two separate books. In The Great Radio Soap Operas, published in 1999, Cox lists Hummert's birth year as 1882.[9] But in Frank and Anne Hummert's Radio Factory, published in 2003, he gives the birth year as 1884.
Hummert's mother came from French ancestry and his father was English. The latter was a mercantilist in lace manufacturing and importing who traveled extensively for Rice, Stix & Co.[1] As a result, Hummert and his family were accustomed to moving around. Hummert, in his early years, lived in various places across the United States and Europe before his father began operating his own merchandising-exporting venture under the label "Hummert Hatfield Co." and the family permanently settled in St. Louis.[10]
Hummert, hoping to take over his father's business, began preparatory studies at the Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, England. By the age of 20, Hummert decided against his father's business and after finishing studies at Stonyhurst, Hummert returned to Missouri and graduated from Saint Louis University.[10]
Hummert turned to public media and soon landed a reporting assignment with the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch and after that assignment ended, Hummert landed reporting jobs for the news journal of the Catholic Archdiocese in Chicago, New World and the International News Syndicate of The New York Times. In 1904, he obtained a real-estate license in St. Louis and became wealthy by buying and selling residential and commercial properties in the aftermath of the seven-month Louisiana Purchase Exposition, informally known as the 1904 World's Fair, which attracted nearly 20 million visitors to St. Louis.
Career
In advertising
In 1920, Hummert began working in his new field of interest, advertising. He was hired as chief copywriter for Albert Lasker's Lord & Thomas agency in New York. Hummert earned a starting salary of $50,000 a year.[11] One of Hummert's first big breaks in advertising came when he coined the slogan "For the skin you love to touch" for soap manufacturer Procter & Gamble's Camay.[12] While at Lord & Thomas, Hummert created ads and slogans for such name-brand companies as Ovaltine, Quaker Quick Macaroni, Gold Medal Flour and Palmolive soap.[13]
In 1927, Hummert hired a new assistant, 22-year-old Anne Ashenhurst (née Schumacher). Ashenhurst was nearly 21 years Hummert's junior, but was the only staff member able to maintain the 18-hour workdays for which Hummert was known. By the age of 22, she had graduated from Goucher College in 1925, had traveled to Paris, gotten a job with the International Herald Tribune, (now known as the International New York Times), and had been married to and divorced from newspaper reporter John Ashenhurst with whom she had a son,[16] all in the span of two years.
Just Plain Bill and early radio years
Frank Hummert and Anne Ashenhurst began collaborating in radio in 1932 and married in 1935. Both were frugal and intensely private, preferring work to a social life. Their earliest radio serial was the soap opera Betty and Bob. Betty and Bob, sponsored by General Mills' Gold Medal Flour, was about the marriage of a secretary of her wealthy boss, whose disapproving father cuts Bob out of the will. The program sustained an eight-year run from 1932-1940.[17]
Also in 1932, their long-running soap Ma Perkins starring Virginia Payne premiered on the radio. Ma Perkins centered around "Ma," who owned and operated a lumber yard in the fictional small Southern town of Rushville Center (population 4000),[18] where the plotlines pivoted around her interactions with the local townsfolk and the ongoing dilemmas of her three children, Evey, Fay and John.[19] The program ended in November 1960.
In September 1932, Just Plain Bill, under the name Bill the Barber, premiered on CBS Radio. The series revolved around a barber who marries above his league. Just Plain Bill and Ma Perkins were the start of the Hummerts' radio empire. Another popular radio serial created by the Hummerts was Skippy, based on the popularity of the eponymous comics series by Percy Crosby.
Helen Trent and radio success
In their first year in radio, Hummert and Schumacher created Just Plain Bill and Ma Perkins, (which both enjoyed extensive 20-plus year runs on radio), for the daytime radio schedule. Their next major hit was The Romance of Helen Trent which premiered October 30, 1933, on CBS. The program revolved around the personal romantic life of Helen Trent and the continuing question: Can a woman of 35 find love? The program ended after 27 years and 7,222 episodes in June 1960, more than any other radio soap opera.[20]
With the beginning of the 17-year run of Stella Dallas in 1938, the Hummert factory was underway. In 1943, B-S-H reorganized to form Dancer Fitzgerald Sample and the Hummerts spun off their own radio production company, Air Features, Inc., which continued to control the airwaves and purchase air time through DFS.[21]
In addition to their daytime soap operas, the Hummerts produced 17 musical programs and 14 crime/mystery shows. To oversee the musical programs, Frank Hummert turned to Gus Haenschen, the St. Louis bandleader who had performed at Hummert's first wedding and was now nationally known on radio as an arranger, conductor, producer, and co-founder of the World Broadcasting System, which supplied high-quality recordings of vocal and instrumental music to smaller radio stations which could not afford a "live" orchestra. Haenschen was entrusted to assign orchestra leaders, vocalists, choral conductors, arrangers, and announcers to each of the musical programs produced by Air Features, for all of which Frank Hummert selected the sponsors, and in some cases the networks, as he did for the soap operas, mystery shows, and crime dramas. At one point, the Hummerts' output included 18 separate serials on the air and as many as 90 episodes each week. The number of writers the Hummerts retained for the scripting of their shows totaled approximately 50, all of whom became accustomed to the tall, gaunt, stoop-shouldered Frank Hummert or the petite Anne Hummert with her trademark white-frame glasses showing up unannounced and spontaneously examining drafts of their output. Other Hummert programs included Amanda of Honeymoon Hill, Judy and Jane, Little Orphan Annie, Frontpage Farrell, Inspector Thorne, and Hearthstone of the Death Squad.
Personal life and death
Public records show that Hummert married the former Adeline Eleanor Woodlock (1886–1934) on July 27, 1908. Woodlock, called "Eleanor" by family and friends, resided just a few blocks away from Hummert and his family. Hummert was German Catholic and Woodlock was Irish Catholic.[12] Walter Gustave "Gus" Haenschen, a popular St. Louis bandleader whom Hummert had publicized as a newspaper reporter, was the pianist at their wedding.
Adeline Eleanor Hummert died on May 11, 1934. She and Frank Hummert had been married for 26 years at the time of her death. They had no children, and had been living in Chicago for several years before her passing. Her gravestone in Chicago's Graceland Cemetery reads "Adeline Woodlock Hummert, 1886-1934, Beloved Wife of E. Frank Hummert."
The following year, Hummert married Anne Ashenhurst, his former assistant at Blackett-Sample-Hummert.[22]
Hummert died on March 12, 1966, in Manhattan.[23] He was 81. Anne Hummert, who never remarried, died a multimillionaire recluse on July 5, 1996, in her Fifth Avenue apartment at the age of 91.[22][24]
^Landry, Robert J. (April 27, 1966). "Pioneer Soaper Frank Hummert, Ever the Hermit, Almost 'Sneaks' His Obit". Variety. p. 34. ProQuest963027145. News of the death on March 12 of Frank Hummert, pioneer in daytime radio serial and nighttime radio musical productions, has been successfully suppressed for over a month at the insistence of the widow, Ann Ashenhurst Hummert, herself a former broadcast program executive. The Hummerts apparently lived in recent years at 1220 Park Avenue. [...] There was a small official paid notice for E. Frank Hummert in the N.Y. Times but that daily had no obit news story on Hummert, as of yesterday.